Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Revisions to the Economic Data Reports Requirements; Amendment 52 to the Fishery Management Plan for the Commercial King and Tanner Crab Fisheries of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands, 65724-65731 [2022-23306]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 210 / Tuesday, November 1, 2022 / Proposed Rules
accordance with the Act, which allows
us to extend the timeline for publication
of the ‘‘Medicare and Medicaid
Programs; Policy and Technical Changes
to the Medicare Advantage, Medicare
Prescription Drug Benefit, Program of
All-inclusive Care for the Elderly
(PACE), Medicaid Fee-For-Service, and
Medicaid Managed Care Programs for
Years 2020 and 2021’’ final rule under
exceptional circumstances.
DATES: As of October 28, 2022, the
timeline for publication of a rule to
finalize the November 1, 2018 proposed
rule (83 FR 54982) is extended until
February 1, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph Strazzire, (410) 786–2775.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
November 1, 2018 (83 FR 54982), we
published a proposed rule, ‘‘Medicare
and Medicaid Programs; Policy and
Technical Changes to the Medicare
Advantage, Medicare Prescription Drug
Benefit, Program of All-inclusive Care
for the Elderly (PACE), Medicaid FeeFor-Service, and Medicaid Managed
Care Programs for Years 2020 and
2021,’’ that would revise the Medicare
Advantage (MA) Risk Adjustment Data
Validation (RADV) regulations to
improve program efficiency and
payment accuracy. The proposed rule
discussed the Secretary’s authority to:
(1) extrapolate in the recovery of RADV
overpayments, starting with payment
year 2011 contract-level audits; and (2)
not apply a fee-for-service (FFS) adjuster
to the RADV overpayment
determinations.
Section 1871(a)(3)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish and
publish a regular timeline for the
publication of final regulations based on
the previous publication of a proposed
regulation. In accordance with section
1871(a)(3)(B) of the Act, the timeline
may vary among different regulations
based on differences in the complexity
of the regulation, the number and scope
of comments received, and other
relevant factors, but may not be longer
than 3 years except under exceptional
circumstances. In addition, in
accordance with section 1871(a)(3)(B) of
the Act, the Secretary may extend the
initial targeted publication date of the
final regulation if the Secretary, no later
than the regulation’s previously
established proposed publication date,
publishes a notice with the new target
date for publication, and such notice
includes a brief explanation of the
justification for the variation.
On October 21, 2021 (86 FR 58245),
we published a notice of a 1-year
extension of the timeline for publication
of a rule to finalize the November 1,
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2018, proposed rule (83 FR 54982) until
November 1, 2022. However, we are
unable to meet this November 1, 2022,
timeline for publication of the
previously referenced RADV-audit
related provisions because of ongoing
exceptional circumstances. As described
in the October 21, 2021 notice of
extension of the timeline, we provided
several extensions of the comment
period and we received extensive public
comments on the proposed rule and
subsequent FFS Adjuster study and
related data. We continue to have
ongoing delays resulting from the
agency’s focus on the COVID–19 public
health emergency, and we have
determined that additional time
continues to be needed to address the
complex policy and operational issues
that were raised.
This document extends the timeline
for publication of the final rule for an
additional 3 months, until February 1,
2023.
Elizabeth J. Gramling,
Executive Secretary to the Department,
Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2022–23563 Filed 10–28–22; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Parts 679 and 680
[Docket No.: 221020–0225]
RIN 0648–BL50
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone off Alaska; Revisions to the
Economic Data Reports Requirements;
Amendment 52 to the Fishery
Management Plan for the Commercial
King and Tanner Crab Fisheries of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; requests for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues a proposed rule
to implement Amendment 52 to the
Fishery Management Plan for the
Commercial King and Tanner Crab
Fisheries of the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands (Crab FMP) and a regulatory
amendment to revise regulations on
Economic Data Reports (EDR)
requirements for groundfish and crab
fisheries off Alaska. If approved, this
proposed rule would remove third party
SUMMARY:
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data verification audits and blind
formatting requirements from the Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) crab
fisheries EDR, the Bering Sea American
Fisheries Act (AFA) pollock fishery,
Chinook Salmon EDR, and the BSAI
Amendment 80 fisheries EDR. This
action would also eliminate the EDR
requirements for the Gulf of Alaska
(GOA) trawl fisheries. This proposed
rule is intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), the Crab
FMP, the Fishery Management Plans for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska
Management Area (GOA FMP), the
Groundfish of the BSAI Management
Area (BSAI FMP), and other applicable
laws.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
December 1, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID NOAA–NMFS–
2022–0083 by any of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
NOAA–NMFS–2022–0083 in the Search
box. Click on the ‘‘Comment’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Assistant Regional Administrator,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska
Region NMFS. Mail comments to P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous).
Electronic copies of the Regulatory
Impact Review (referred to as the
‘‘Analysis’’) and the Categorical
Exclusion prepared for this emergency
rule may be obtained from https://
www.regulations.gov identified by
Docket ID NOAA–NMFS–2022–0083 or
from the NMFS Alaska Region website
at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
region/alaska.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
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of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this rule may
be submitted by mail to NMFS at the
above address and to www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain. Find the particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public’’ or by using the search
function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Watson, 907–586–7228.
NMFS
manages the groundfish fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off
Alaska under the BSAI FMP and the
GOA FMP. NMFS manages the king and
Tanner crab fisheries in the United
States EEZ of the BSAI under the Crab
FMP. The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
prepared, and NMFS approved, the
BSAI FMP, the GOA FMP, and the Crab
FMP under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq.
A notice of availability for
Amendment 52 to the Crab FMP was
published in the Federal Register at (87
FR 60638), on October 6, 2022.
Comment on Amendment 52 is invited
through December 5, 2022. All relevant
written comments received by the end
of the comment period, whether
specifically directed to the FMP
amendment, this proposed rule, or both,
will be considered in the approval/
disapproval decision for Amendment 52
and addressed in the response to
comments in the final rule.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Background
Four EDR data collection programs
are in place for crab and groundfish
fisheries off Alaska. These programs
impose mandatory annual data
reporting requirements for regulated
entities participating in the BSAI Crab
Rationalization (CR) fisheries, the AFA
pollock fishery, the BSAI Amendment
80 fisheries, and the GOA trawl
fisheries. The purpose of EDRs are to
gather data and information to improve
the analyses developed by the Council
on the social and economic effects of the
catch share or rationalization programs,
to understand the economic
performance of participants in these
programs, and to help estimate impacts
of future issues, problems, or proposed
revisions to the programs covered by the
EDRs.
CR Program EDR
The Crab EDR was implemented
concurrently with the CR Program
under Amendments 18 and 19 of the
BSAI Crab FMP (70 FR 10174; March 2,
2005). The rule requiring the Crab EDR
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submission was codified in 50 CFR
680.6, which retroactively required
participants to submit EDR forms for
1998, 2001, and 2004 calendar year
operations by June 1, 2005, and to
submit an annual Crab EDR form for
calendar year 2005, and thereafter by
May 1 of the following year.
Amendment 42 (78 FR 36122; June 17,
2013) revised annual Crab EDR
reporting requirements in order to
eliminate redundant reporting
requirements, standardize reporting
across participants, and reduce costs
associated with data collection. The
amended rule extended the annual
submission deadline to July 31.
The reporting requirements for the
Crab EDR apply to owners and
leaseholders of catcher vessels (CVs)
and catcher/processors (CPs) with
landings of BSAI CR crab, including
Community Development Quota (CDQ)
allocated crab, and owners and
leaseholders of Registered Crab
Receivers (RCRs) who purchase and/or
process landed BSAI CR crab during a
calendar year. For all groups, the annual
submission requirement is imposed on
CR crab program participants who
harvest, purchase, or process CR crab.
The Crab EDR consists of reporting
forms developed for three respective
sectors: the Crab CV EDR, Crab
processor EDR, and the Crab CP EDR.
The CV and processor forms collect
distinct sets of data elements, with the
CP form combining of all data elements
collected in the CV form and applicable
elements from the processor form. A
complete list of the data elements for
each of the forms is in Section 3.2 of the
Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Amendment 80 EDR
The Amendment 80 EDR was
implemented on January 20, 2008 (72
FR 52668; September 14, 2007) as part
of the Amendment 80 management
program and codified in regulation at 50
CFR 679.94. Amendment 80 allocated
several BSAI non-pollock trawl
groundfish species among trawl fishery
sectors, and facilitated the formation of
harvesting cooperatives in the non-AFA
trawl CP sector. The initial Amendment
80 EDR submissions were due June 1,
2009, reporting data for the 2008
calendar year. The Amendment 80 EDR
reporting requirements applied to all
Amendment 80 Quota Share (QS)
permit holders. Permit holders who
actively operated an Amendment 80
vessel were required to complete the
entire EDR form, while QS permit
holders who did not operate a vessel
were required to complete portions of
the form pertaining to QS permit sale or
lease costs and revenues.
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When the GOA Trawl EDR program
was implemented for both CV and CP
participants, it amended the
Amendment 80 EDR at 50 CFR 679.94
to include the CPs participating in GOA
trawl fisheries. It also changed the name
of the form from the Amendment 80
EDR to the Annual Trawl CP EDR.
Additional reporting elements specific
to GOA Trawl CPs were added to the
form. The rule also extended the
requirement to complete all portions of
the EDR form to owners and
leaseholders of any vessel named on a
License Limitation Program (LLP)
groundfish license authorizing a CP
using trawl gear to harvest and process
LLP groundfish species in the GOA. The
association between the GOA Trawl (CV
and shoreside processor) EDR and
Annual Trawl CP EDRs has resulted in
confusion. For the sake of clarity, in this
proposed rule, the EDR currently
specified under 50 CFR 679.94 is
referenced as the Amendment 80 EDR
(rather than the Annual Trawl CP EDR),
and the EDR under 50 CFR 679.110
(a)(1) and (2) is referenced as the GOA
Trawl EDR; any relevant distinctions or
overlaps are described as needed.
The Amendment 80 EDR form has
been submitted annually by
Amendment 80 QS holders since 2008.
A complete list of the data elements for
each of the forms is in Section 3.2 of the
Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
GOA Trawl EDR
The GOA Trawl EDR was
implemented on January 1, 2015 (79 FR
71313; December 2, 2014) and codified
in regulation at 50 CFR 679.110. The
initial GOA Trawl EDR submissions
were due June 1, 2016, for reporting
2015 calendar year data. The GOA
Trawl EDR was implemented to collect
relevant baseline information that could
be used to assess the impacts of a future
catch share program on affected
harvesters, processors, and communities
in the GOA. However, Council action on
a catch share program that addressed
issues with GOA bycatch management
was suspended in December 2016, and
no catch share program exists for GOA
harvesters, processors, and
communities.
The intended submitters for the GOA
Trawl EDR includes owners and
leaseholders of CVs and CPs active in
the Central and Western GOA
groundfish trawl fishery and operators
of shoreside processing facilities that
receive groundfish catch from the GOA.
The EDR consists of two distinct EDR
forms, the GOA Trawl CV EDR and GOA
Shoreside Processor EDR. An additional
EDR form overlaps with the
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harvested BSAI pollock during the
previous year and collects information
about the vessel’s average fuel
consumption, the total amount in
gallons of fuel loaded onto the vessel,
and total annual fuel cost. The Vessel
Master Survey form is used to determine
the fishing and bycatch conditions
observed during the BSAI pollock
fishery and factors that motivated
Chinook salmon bycatch avoidance. A
complete list of the data elements for
each of the forms is in Section 3.2 of the
Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Amendment 80 EDR, as described
above.
The GOA Trawl CV EDR form is
required for all trawl CVs that harvested
groundfish in the GOA during the
previous year. The GOA Shoreside
Processor EDR form is required for all
shore-based processors that receive and
process groundfish from GOA trawl
fisheries. The Annual Trawl CP EDR
form is required for all vessel owners
and leaseholders that catch and process
groundfish in the GOA trawl fisheries.
A complete list of the data elements for
each of the forms is in Section 3.2 of the
Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
History of the Action
Amendment 91 Chinook Salmon EDR
The Amendment 91 EDR and
additional record keeping and reporting
requirements associated with
monitoring of Chinook salmon bycatch
avoidance measures for the AFA pollock
fishery were implemented concurrently
on March 5, 2012 (77 FR 5389; February
3, 2012). The implementation of the
Amendment 91 EDR occurred
approximately 17 months after
Amendment 91 (75 FR 53026) went into
effect. The initial submission of EDR
forms required under 50 CFR 679.65
were due on June 1, 2013 reporting data
for the 2012 calendar year. The
Amendment 91 EDR was implemented
to provide additional data to assess the
effectiveness of the Chinook salmon
bycatch management measures in the
Bering Sea (BS) pollock fishery.
The Amendment 91 EDR reporting
requirement applies to owners and
leaseholders of AFA CVs, CPs, and
motherships active in the BS pollock
fishery and to entities eligible to receive
Chinook salmon Prohibited Species
Catch (PSC) allocation, including AFA
in-shore sector harvest cooperative
representatives, sector-based Incentive
Plan Agreement representatives, and
CDQ group representatives. In addition,
vessel captains who actively participate
in the AFA pollock fishery are intended
to complete one of the three
Amendment 91 EDR forms, but this
form is submitted by the owner or
leaseholders of the vessel.
The Amendment 91 EDR program
consists of three separate forms: the
Compensated Transfer Report (CTR), the
Vessel Fuel Survey, and the Vessel
Master Survey. The CTR collects
transaction data on all compensated
transfers of Chinook PSC by participants
in the AFA fishery. The CTR is to be
completed by all entities participating
as lessor or lessee in compensated
transfers of Chinook PSC. However, no
such transactions have ever been
reported. The Vessel Fuel Survey form
is required for all AFA vessels that
Public testimony from one
stakeholder at the February 2018
Council meeting noted that the EDR
programs had been in effect for some
time and that industry was spending
considerable time and money to
complete the reports, in some cases
reimbursing NMFS for the
administrative costs of the EDR
programs through catch share cost
recovery programs. The testifier
suggested that the Council review the
EDR requirements to determine whether
and how the data was being used,
whether it was being collected
efficiently, and whether the data
collection programs were meeting the
Council’s needs.
In April 2018, the Council reviewed a
discussion paper prepared by NMFS
that provided information related to
NMFS’s request that the Council review
all its regulations to identify any that
were outdated, unnecessary, ineffective,
or could be further streamlined. This
discussion paper referenced the
Council’s February 2018 discussion
regarding the EDR requirements being a
possible area warranting future Council
review. In addition, at the April 2018
meeting, the Council also heard public
testimony raising the question of
whether the EDR requirements for the
GOA trawl CVs and shoreside
processors had met the Council’s
purpose and need to collect baseline
information to assess the impacts of a
potential future catch share program in
those fisheries.
Later in the April 2018 meeting, in
response to this public comment and
further discussion among Council
members, the Council requested that
NMFS prepare a discussion paper
describing the EDR requirements for all
programs, explaining how the data are
used, and estimating the costs of
complying with the EDR requirements.
The Council’s motion stated that the
Council could then use the information
in the discussion paper to determine if
revisions to EDR requirements were
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needed and, if so, the priority and
process for proposed revisions.
NMFS presented this discussion
paper to the Council in April 2019. The
EDR discussion paper included a set of
shorter-term practical recommendations
aimed at reducing costs and burdens, as
well as improving data utility by
streamlining data access. These
recommendations included eliminating
routine third-party data verification
audits and limiting the audits to
instances of gross noncompliance,
reviewing duplication of reporting
requirements in EDR programs, and
improving data utility while
maintaining confidential data
protections by reconsidering the blind
formatting and the rule-of-5 aggregation
standard. Blind formatting and the ruleof-5 aggregation standard are explained
in detail further down in this proposed
rule. In addition to the shorter-term
practical recommendations, the
discussion paper also set forth longer
term recommendations that included
developing a systematic approach to
identifying and prioritizing the
Council’s needs for economic and social
science information. Therein, these
recommendations specifically noted the
need to identify relevant analytical and
performance metrics, minimum
requirements for accuracy and precision
of information outputs, and a framework
for balancing trade-offs between all
relevant dimensions of information
quality and system costs. A full
description of the specific longer-term
recommendations of the April 2019
NMFS discussion paper can be found in
Section 1.3 the Analysis (see
ADDRESSES).
Also at the April 2019 meeting, the
Council recommended a comprehensive
review of the current EDR programs.
The comprehensive review was
undertaken by the Council’s Social
Sciences Planning Team (SSPT). The
SSPT provided a report to the Council
about its progress on this issue at the
February 2020 meeting. Following
review of the SSPT report, the Council
further instructed the SSPT to engage in
a series of outreach meetings to seek
input from EDR stakeholders in
evaluating the EDR program overall, as
well as each individual EDR program.
Virtual outreach meetings were held in
2020, and the final SSPT outreach
reports were presented to the Council in
April 2021.
After receiving the SSPT reports, the
Council took action in a motion on
April 16, 2021. That motion did not
change the purpose and need, but
created a new alternative, with four
non-mutually exclusive options to
remove each EDR. The motion also
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added a new option to change the
frequency of EDR information
collections from annually to options of
two years, three years, and five years,
respectively.
The Council took final action on
February 8, 2022. The Council chose to
eliminate the use of data verification
audits, because automated procedures
for validating EDR submission have
reduced the need for audits. Eliminating
data verification audits would remove a
potential compliance burden for those
required to submit EDRs. The Council
also chose to revise the data aggregation
and blind formatting requirements in
the Crab EDR in order to improve the
usability of collected data and to make
the Crab EDR’s confidentiality policy
consistent with other Council and
NMFS data reporting methods. The
Council chose to remove the GOA Trawl
EDR requirements altogether. The
original purpose of this EDR was to
collect baseline data to prepare for
development of a GOA trawl catch share
program and the Council has
subsequently chosen not to continue
with development of a catch share
program for the GOA trawl fishery at
this time. Accordingly, this EDR is no
longer aligned with its intended
purpose. Eliminating the GOA Trawl
EDR would remove the reporting burden
for industry and agency management
costs. Finally, the Council reiterated its
April 2021 request for several nonregulatory changes to the EDR reporting
forms to decrease respondent burden.
These changes were identified in
stakeholder workshops and the March
2021 SSPT report, and include changes
to the EDR forms to eliminate data fields
that are not used in analyses and to prefill data fields that do not change
frequently. To that end, NMFS
economists are implementing these
changes and will report progress to the
Council in October 2022.
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Need for Action
Data submitted in the current Crab
EDRs provide valuable information for
program evaluation and analysis of
proposed conservation and management
measures. However, the Crab EDR was
implemented over ten years ago and
revisions are needed to improve the
usability, efficiency, and consistency of
this data collection program and to
minimize cost to industry and the
Federal government. Several of the
revisions to the Crab EDR included in
this proposed rule, specifically on the
use of third-party audits and blind
formatting, could reduce industry and
government costs while still
maintaining the integrity and
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confidentiality of this data collection
program.
In the original Crab EDR program,
several requirements were implemented
to provide a higher standard of
confidentiality for proprietary business
information reported in the Crab EDR.
These requirements were stricter than
those that apply to all other confidential
fisheries information. In practice, these
stricter confidentiality requirements
have reduced the usability of the data
for analysis and increased the cost of the
Crab EDR program, without providing
additional practical protections for
sensitive information. Confidentiality
requirements that apply to other routine
data collections provide sufficient
protections for the EDR data.
Different issues exist in the GOA
Trawl EDR program, which was
implemented in 2015 and designed to
collect baseline information to assess
the impacts of a future GOA trawl catch
share program. Because no catch share
program is in development by the
Council and none is apt to be developed
in the foreseeable future, the GOA Trawl
EDR program is no longer needed.
Challenges With Data Verification and
Auditing Requirement
EDR data verification is required
under EDR regulations and requires
NMFS or its designated agent, known as
a data collection agent (DCA), to verify
information with a person required to
submit the applicable EDR or that
person’s designated representative. The
regulations require the EDR submitter to
respond to inquiries from the DCA
within 20 days, require the submitter to
provide supporting records to the DCA
as requested, and authorize the DCA
auditor to review the records for the
purpose of substantiating values
reported in the EDR. In developing the
data verification and audit procedures,
NMFS has relied on the Council’s
record of decision for the CR Program
for guidance in implementing the Crab
EDR, specifically, the CR Program
Regulatory Impact Review/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/
IRFA). This guidance states that the
verification of data, auditing, and errorchecking would be the primary
responsibility of the DCA. Further, the
guidance provides that the DCA will: (1)
develop a system to identify outliers,
incomplete data, or anomalies in the
data submissions; and (2) retain
accountants to review data submissions
as part of the audit process and identify
errors or flag possible fraudulent
submissions.
NMFS began developing data
verification protocols and procedures
for the Crab EDR in 2005 and has
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continued to refine the process to
identify and correct data reporting
errors, while reducing the cost and
burden of the audit process. Prior to
incorporation of EDR data into the
Alaska Fish Information Network
(AKFIN) database in 2011, EDR data
validation was largely reliant on the
audit process. Automation now allows
the DCA to identify most errors and
obtain corrections from submitters
shortly after EDRs are submitted
EDR data verification via automation
currently employs a series of
procedures, including (1) primary,
automated data validation procedures,
(2) secondary validation employing
statistical procedures and visual
inspection to identify data anomalies
and statistical outliers, and (3) editing
and imputation for data errors identified
by data users that were not detected and
corrected in primary and secondary
validation.
Primary automated validation
procedures are executed on each EDR
record shortly after receiving a certified
EDR submission, with follow-up
contacts with submitters to obtain
corrections as needed. Most of these
errors are identified and corrected easily
with a phone call and result in a recertified EDR submission within two
weeks of the submission.
To begin secondary validation via
automation, AKFIN completes
integration of current year EDR records
with other datasets, calculation of prorata and statistical indices, and plotting
for visual inspection. NMFS and the
DCA review the results to identify
visual outliers and anomalies. Flagged
values are selected for correction
through follow-up by the DCA or
selection for a third-party verification
audit.
By contrast, audit protocols require
auditors to notify EDR submitters that
have been selected for audit and to
request supporting materials to enable
auditors to substantiate reported values.
Once auditors have received the
requested records, the auditors confirm
a correct value for the data element
(either the original reported value or a
corrected value). Auditors also evaluate
the quality of supporting information
provided by the submitter and
characterize the quality and nature of
reporting errors. Audit corrections are
entered into the EDR database, and
AKFIN’s production version of the EDR
database is finalized after all audit
results are entered.
But two issues have emerged with the
audit process from working with CPA
firms. First, in all the EDR audit reviews
conducted since 2006, there has not
been a single finding of intentional
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misreporting or of any bias in the
direction of reporting errors identified
by auditors. Most of the errors found
between 2006 and the present were
unintentional human error and could be
easily corrected by contacting the
submitter for clarification without the
additional cost of hiring a CPA firm.
Second, verifying the quality of results
produced by CPAs has required NMFS
and the DCA to recreate the same work
completed by the CPA firms. The tasks
involved with auditing EDR data
submissions are unique, generally
unfamiliar to CPAs, and require one or
two annual cycles of EDR submissions
to gain experience. Given that CPA
firms have chosen to not renew their
contracts with NMFS and new contracts
must be established, it has proven
challenging for CPAs to gain experience
auditing EDR data submissions. Without
experienced CPAs to complete the
audits, NMFS and the DCA must
continue to spend significant time and
resources verifying the audits.
Eliminating the audit authorization
would remove these challenges.
Removing the audit requirements
would also avoid the DCA from needing
to contract a third-party auditor to
conduct the audit portion of the data
verification. And doing so would not
compromise data quality due to the
automated EDR data verification
procedures described above, which
would remain in place and continue to
be used under the proposed rule.
Additionally, enforcement provisions
exist for all recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, including the EDR
program. Enforcement actions would
continue to be possible in cases of
noncompliance with the EDR regulatory
provisions.
The automated verification and audit
processes accrue an annual combined
cost for industry that is estimated to be
approximately $26,400 for each Crab
EDR; $1,480 for each Amendment 80
EDR; and $2,405 for each GOA Trawl
EDR. While the removal of the audit
processes would reduce these costs,
some portion would remain as routine
automated data verification procedures
would continue as detailed above.
In addition to reducing the cost of
industry compliance with audits, the
NMFS contracting cost for CPA firms
would be eliminated. The Crab EDR
costs have ranged from approximately
$22,000 to $65,000 annually and have
generally been decreasing over the life
of the Crab EDR Program. Audits were
done in the Amendment 91 program in
2013 and 2014 with costs of between
$15,000 and $18,000 annually for audits
of the fuel and master surveys.
Amendment 80 EDR and GOA Trawl
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EDR combined have had auditing costs
of $30,000 to $35,000 annually. This
action would eliminate the audit
contracting costs incurred for the EDR
program, as well as any associated cost
recovery fees.
Challenges With the Blind Formatting
Requirement
Blind formatting requires the
collection of EDR forms to be performed
by a third-party designated data
collection auditor (DDCA) and the
removal of unique identifiers (e.g.,
vessel identifiers, permit numbers) from
EDR data records accessible to the
Council and NMFS. Blind formatting is
only required for the Crab EDR and the
GOA Trawl EDR. Blind formatting
introduces significant administrative
challenges for NMFS’s management of
the EDR program because staff
responsible for oversight of data
verification and validation processes are
prohibited from accessing identifying
information. This has impeded timely
completion of verification audits and
production of economic reports
developed from EDR data.
The EDR data confidentiality
protocols also impose limitations on the
data’s usability because the data is
aggregated to such an extent that details
needed to analyze the associated catch
share program’s social and economic
impacts are not available. The DDCA
and blind formatting are unique to the
Crab EDR and the GOA Trawl EDR
program, as they are not required for the
Amendment 80 EDR program or
Amendment 91 Chinook Salmon EDR
program. The Council wished to apply
a higher standard of confidential data
protection to the cost data and other
proprietary business information
collected in EDRs. But these protective
standards impede the Council and
NMFS analysts’ use of the data. Blind
data is frequently either inconsistently
applied across EDR programs or
unusable because critical data elements,
such as permit numbers, are not
accessible. Analysts’ use of blind EDR
data also enhances the risk of
inadvertently disclosing confidential
data. This is because of the small
number of entities that may be
represented in the EDR records. If the
EDR records are not accessible to
analysts, it is hard for them to know if
the data should be confidential.
Analysts may avoid using EDR data
even where it may have been the best
information available, and choose
alternative data sets with lower risk and
complexity.
Removing the blind formatting
requirements would make the data
aggregations and confidentiality
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protections for the Crab EDR
comparable to the requirements under
other EDR programs. It would also
increase the usability and access to the
EDR data for Council and NMFS
analysts. Without the concern of
inadvertently disclosing confidential
data, analysts may be more likely to use
the EDR data.
Challenges With the GOA Trawl EDR
Program
In its original purpose and need
statement for the GOA Trawl EDR in its
February 2013 motion, the Council
identified a need to establish a baseline
information collection that could be
used to assess the impacts of a catch
share program, particularly on affected
harvesters, processors, and communities
in the GOA. However, Council action on
a catch share program that addressed
issues with GOA bycatch management
was suspended in December 2016.
Thus, the original need for the GOA
Trawl EDR has been indefinitely
suspended, calling into question the
efficacy of continuing the program given
that taxpayers and industry bear the cost
of maintaining the program. Elimination
of the GOA Trawl EDR would avoid the
agency-borne programmatic costs since
the GOA Trawl EDR is not part of a
catch share fishery and, thus,
administrative costs are not subject to
cost recovery. Elimination of the GOA
Trawl EDR program would also
eliminate compliance costs for industry.
Additional information about the
administrative and the industry
compliance costs associated with this
EDR can be found in Section 4.5 of the
Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Proposed Rule
This proposed rule would remove or
revise regulations at 50 CFR parts 679
and 680. This proposed rule would
remove third-party data verification
audits for the Crab EDR, the
Amendment 91 EDR, and the
Amendment 80 EDR and remove blind
formatting requirements for the Crab
EDR. This action would also eliminate
the GOA Trawl EDR requirements.
Eliminating Data Verification Audits
This proposed rule would remove the
data verification audit requirements at
§ 679.65(e), § 679.94(b), and § 680.6(f),
respectively. Removal of the audit
authorization would eliminate the need
for the DCA to contract with a thirdparty auditor to conduct the audit
portion of the data verification. EDR
data verification currently employs a
series of validation procedures, as
described above. These data validation
procedures would remain and continue
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to ensure the data reported is error-free.
Enforcement actions would continue to
be possible in cases of noncompliance
with the EDR provisions as part of
normal enforcement of record keeping
and reporting requirements.
This proposed rule would also
remove the definitions for ‘‘Designated
data collection auditor’’ at § 679.2 and
‘‘Auditor’’ at § 680.2. Because the EDR
audit requirements would be removed
under this proposed rule, these
definitions will no longer be required.
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Eliminating Blind Formatting
This proposed rule would remove the
definitions for ‘‘Blind data’’ at § 679.2
and § 680.2. Both definitions describe
the required formatting process to
remove the personal identifiers to the
data collected from the EDRs. The
identifiers include Federal fisheries
permit numbers and State of Alaska
vessel registration numbers that are
essential data elements to analysts when
developing reports and documents
based on EDR data. Removing the blind
formatting requirements would make
the data aggregations and confidentiality
protections for the Crab EDR
comparable to the requirements under
the other EDR programs. It would also
increase the usability and access to the
EDR data for Council and NMFS
analysts.
Eliminating the GOA Trawl EDR
This proposed rule would remove and
reserve Subpart J—Gulf of Alaska Trawl
Economic Data. The original purpose of
the GOA Trawl EDR was to establish a
baseline information collection that
could be used to assess the impacts of
a catch share program. However, no
catch share program has been developed
to date or is currently contemplated.
The original need for this data
collection program has been indefinitely
diminished since 2016 when the
Council suspended work on a possible
GOA catch share program, calling into
question the efficacy of continuing the
program. Eliminating the GOA Trawl
EDR would avoid the agency-borne
programmatic costs incurred by the
Federal government due to the GOA
Trawl EDR not being part of a catch
share fishery and, thus, administrative
costs not being subject to cost recovery.
Elimination of the GOA Trawl EDR
program would also eliminate
compliance costs for industry.
This proposed rule would also revise
section heading at § 679.94 and revise
§ 679.94(a)(1) to remove GOA Trawl CPs
from the requirement to submit the
Amendment 80 EDR form. When the
GOA Trawl EDR program was
implemented, it required owners and
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leaseholders of any vessel named on an
LLP groundfish license authorizing a CP
using trawl gear to harvest and process
LLP groundfish species in the GOA to
complete all portions of the Amendment
80 EDR form. This proposed rule would
limit the Amendment 80 EDR
requirement to Amendment 80 QS
permit holders alone.
Other Regulatory Changes
NMFS proposes to revise regulations
at §§ 680.6(a)(2), (a)(3), (c), (d), (e)(1),
and (e)(2) to update the instructions for
submitting Crab EDR forms to be
consistent with the submission
instructions for the other more recent
EDR programs.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b) and 305(d)
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent
with the FMPs, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law, subject to further
consideration of comments received
during the public comment period.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Certification Under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration that this
proposed rule, if adopted, would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This proposed rule would remove
third party data verification audits and
blind formatting requirements for the
BSAI crab fisheries EDR, AFA pollock
fishery Chinook Salmon EDR, and the
BSAI Amendment 80 fisheries EDR.
This action would also eliminate
altogether the EDR requirements for the
GOA trawl fisheries. This proposed rule
would improve the usability, efficiency,
and consistency of the data collection
programs and minimize cost to industry
and the Federal government while still
maintaining the integrity and
confidentiality of the EDR data.
Many of the directly regulated entities
potentially affected by this action are
considered to be large entities based on
cooperative affiliations. These include
the AFA CPs, AFA CVs, Amendment 80
CPs, and the Crab CVs. However, there
are three AFA motherships that are not
likely to exceed the 750 person
threshold individually or within the
fishing cooperative that they belong to
and are considered to be directly
regulated small entities. There is also
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65729
one Amendment 80-eligible CP that is
subject to the Amendment 80 EDR that
is a small entity with no known
cooperative affiliations. Shoreside
processors participating in the Crab EDR
and GOA Trawl EDR are considered to
be directly regulated small entities. The
numbers of directly regulated small
entities in the shoreside component of
the GOA Trawl EDR varies considerably
and has been as high as 17 in recent
years. Nineteen shoreside crab
processors are considered to be directly
regulated small entities. The six CDQ
organizations are directly regulated
small entities within one or more of the
EDRs. Finally, 26 of the 78 trawl CVs
that submit the GOA trawl EDR are
directly regulated small entities. Based
on the scope of this action, impacts to
small, directly regulated entities are
expected to be beneficial because this
action would reduce and remove the
cost of the EDR requirement to the
directly regulated entities.
This action does not place any new
regulatory burden on fishery
participants required to submit EDRs; it
removes reporting burdens to improve
the usability, efficiency, and
consistency of the data collection
programs and minimize cost to
participants required to submit EDRs.
This proposed action, therefore, is not
expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of the
small entities directly regulated by this
proposed action.
As a result, an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required, and
none has been prepared.
Regulatory Impact Review
A Regulatory Impact Review was
prepared to assess all costs and benefits
of available regulatory alternatives. A
copy of this analysis is available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES). The Council
recommended Amendment 52 and the
regulatory revisions in this proposed
rule based on those measures that
maximized net benefits to the Nation.
Specific aspects of the economic
analysis are discussed above in the
Certification under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act section.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This proposed rule contains
collection of information requirements
subject to review and approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act. NMFS has submitted these
requirements to OMB for approval
under OMB control numbers 0648–0518
(Alaska Region Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Crab EDRs); 0648–0564
(Groundfish Trawl Catcher/Processor
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EDR); 0648–0633 (Alaska Chinook
Salmon EDR); and 0648–0700 (Gulf of
Alaska Catcher Vessel and Processor
Trawl EDR). The proposed changes to
the collections are described below. The
public reporting burden for the
information collection requirements
provided below includes the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information.
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OMB Control Number 0648–0518
NMFS proposes to revise and extend
by three years OMB Control Number
0648–0518. This collection covers the
economic data collection requirements
for the CR Program and is necessary to
monitor and evaluate the CR Program.
This collection would be revised to
remove third-party data verification
audits and blind formatting
requirements for the BSAI crab fisheries
EDR because this proposed rule removes
these requirements. The three crab EDR
forms would be revised to pre-fill data
fields that do not change frequently to
reduce the burden of the crab EDR
forms. Pre-filling the data fields is
estimated to reduce the respondent’s
data entry time by 15 minutes. However,
since the burden hour estimates for the
forms are rounded to the nearest hour,
this modest reduction would not
decrease the public reporting burden.
Subject to public comment, no changes
are made to the estimated reporting or
cost burden for the EDRs because the
estimates allow for differences in the
time needed to complete and submit the
forms.
Public reporting burden per
individual response is estimated to
average 20 hours each for the Annual
Catcher Vessel Crab EDR and the
Annual CP Crab EDR, 16 hours for the
Annual Processor Crab EDR, and 1 hour
for an EDR certification page.
The estimated number of respondents
for this collection is 77; the estimated
total annual burden hours are 1,449
hours; and the estimated total annual
cost to the public for recordkeeping and
reporting costs is $385.
OMB Control Number 0648–0564
NMFS proposes to revise and extend
by three years OMB Control Number
0648–0564. This collection covers the
economic data collection requirements
for Amendment 80 and GOA trawl CPs.
This collection is necessary to help
evaluate the Amendment 80 Program,
including program-eligible trawl CPs,
and is used by NMFS and the Council
to assess the impacts of major changes
in the groundfish management regime,
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including programs for prohibited
species catch species and target species.
This collection would be revised to
remove third-party data verification
audits for the Annual Trawl Catcher/
Processor EDR and remove requirements
for the GOA Trawl EDR Program
because this proposed rule removes
regulations for the audit authorization
and eliminates the GOA Trawl EDR
Program. Eliminating the program
would simplify the Annual Trawl
Catcher/Processor form. This form
would be revised to remove data fields
that are not being used in analyses and
to pre-fill data fields that do not change
frequently. These changes to the form
are expected to reduce the time burden
on respondents by approximately two
hours.
Public reporting burden per
individual response is estimated to
average 20 hours for the Annual GOA
Trawl Catcher/Processor EDR.
The estimated number of respondents
for this collection is 22; the estimated
total annual burden hours are 440
hours; and the estimated total annual
cost to the public for recordkeeping and
reporting costs is $110.
OMB Control Number 0648–0633
NMFS proposes that OMB Control
Number 0648–0633 is revised to remove
the verification audit for the
Compensated Transfer Report because
this rule removes the authorization for
third party data verification audits.
Subject to public comment, no changes
are made to the estimated reporting or
cost burden for the EDR forms as the
estimates allow for differences in the
time needed to complete and submit the
forms.
Public reporting burden per
individual response is estimated to
average 40 hours for the Compensated
Transfer Report, 4 hours for the Vessel
Fuel Survey, and 4 hours for the Vessel
Master Survey.
OMB Control Number 0648–0700
NMFS proposes to discontinue OMB
Control Number 0648–0700, which
covers the economic data collection
requirements for the GOA Trawl EDR
Program. The original purpose of the
GOA Trawl EDR was to establish a
baseline information collection that
could be used to assess the impacts of
a catch share program. However, no
catch share program has been developed
to date. The original need for this data
collection program has been indefinitely
suspended, calling into question the
efficacy of continuing the program given
that taxpayers and industry bear the cost
of maintaining the program. Elimination
of the GOA Trawl EDR would eliminate
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
the agency borne programmatic costs
incurred by the Federal government as
the GOA Trawl EDR is not part of a
catch share fishery and thus
administrative costs are not subject to
cost recovery. Elimination of the GOA
Trawl EDR program would also
eliminate compliance costs for industry.
Public Comment
Public comment is sought regarding
whether this proposed collection-ofinformation is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
the accuracy of the burden estimate;
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and ways to minimize the
burden of the collection-of-information,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology. Submit
comments on these or any other aspects
of the collection-of-information to
NMFS Alaska Region at the ADDRESSES
above and at www.reginfo.gov/public/
do/PRAMain.
Notwithstanding any other provisions
of law, no person is required to respond
to, and no person shall be subject to
penalty for failure to comply with, a
collection-of-information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that
collection-of-information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
All currently approved NOAA
collections of information may be
viewed at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRASearch.
List of Subjects
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 680
Alaska, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated: October 20, 2022.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50
CFR parts 679 and 680 as follows:
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 679 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et
seq.; 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108–447; Pub. L.
111–281.
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§ 679.2
[Amended]
2. In § 679.2, remove the definitions
for ‘‘Blind data’’ and ‘‘Designated data
collection auditor’’.
■
§ 679.65
[Amended]
3. In § 679.65, remove paragraph (e).
4. In § 679.94, revise the section
heading, paragraph (a)(1), and remove
and reserve paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
■
■
§ 679.94 Economic data report (EDR) for
the Amendment 80 sector.
(a) * * *
(1) Requirement to submit an EDR. A
person who held an Amendment 80 QS
permit during a calendar year must
submit a complete Annual Trawl
Catcher/Processor EDR for that calendar
year by following the instructions on the
Annual Trawl Catcher/Processor EDR
form.
(b) [Reserved]
Subpart J—[Removed and Reserved]
5. Remove and reserve subpart J,
consisting of § 679.110.
*
*
*
*
*
■
PART 680—SHELLFISH FISHERIES OF
THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE
OFF ALASKA
6. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 680 continues to read as follows:
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■
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16:25 Oct 31, 2022
Jkt 259001
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1862; Pub. L. 109–
241; Pub. L. 109–479.
§ 680.2
[Amended]
7. In § 680.2, remove the definitions
for ‘‘Auditor’’ and ‘‘Blind data’’.
■ 8. In § 680.6, revise paragraphs (a)(2)
and (3), (c), (d), (e)(1) and (2), and
remove paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as
follows:
■
§ 680.6
Crab economic data report (EDR).
(a) * * *
(2) A completed EDR or EDR
certification pages must be submitted to
NMFS, in the manner specified on the
NMFS-issued EDR form, for each
calendar year on or before 1700 hours,
A.l.t., July 31 of the following year.
(3) Annual EDR forms for catcher
vessels, catcher/processors, shoreside
crab processors, and stationary floating
crab processors are available on the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov or by
contacting NMFS at 1–800–304–4846.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Annual catcher vessel crab EDR—
Any owner or leaseholder of a catcher
vessel that landed CR crab in the
previous calendar year must submit to
NMFS, in the manner specified on the
NMFS-issued EDR form, a completed
catcher vessel EDR for annual data for
the previous calendar year.
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65731
(d) Annual catcher/processor crab
EDR—Any owner or leaseholder of a
catcher/processor that harvested or
processed CR crab in the previous
calendar year must submit to NMFS, in
the manner specified on the NMFSissued EDR form, a completed catcher/
processor EDR for annual data for the
previous calendar year.
(e) * * *
(1) Any owner or leaseholder of an
SFCP or a shoreside crab processor that
processed CR crab, including custom
processing of CR crab performed for
other crab buyers, in the previous
calendar year must submit to NMFS, in
the manner specified on the NMFSissued EDR form, a completed processor
EDR for annual data for the previous
calendar year.
(2) Any holder of a registered crab
receiver (RCR) permit that obtained
custom processing for CR Program crab
in the previous calendar year must
submit to NMFS, in the manner
specified on the NMFS-issued EDR
form, a completed processor EDR for
annual data for the previous calendar
year.
[FR Doc. 2022–23306 Filed 10–31–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 210 (Tuesday, November 1, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 65724-65731]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-23306]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Parts 679 and 680
[Docket No.: 221020-0225]
RIN 0648-BL50
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Revisions to
the Economic Data Reports Requirements; Amendment 52 to the Fishery
Management Plan for the Commercial King and Tanner Crab Fisheries of
the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; requests for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a proposed rule to implement Amendment 52 to the
Fishery Management Plan for the Commercial King and Tanner Crab
Fisheries of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (Crab FMP) and a
regulatory amendment to revise regulations on Economic Data Reports
(EDR) requirements for groundfish and crab fisheries off Alaska. If
approved, this proposed rule would remove third party data verification
audits and blind formatting requirements from the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands (BSAI) crab fisheries EDR, the Bering Sea American
Fisheries Act (AFA) pollock fishery, Chinook Salmon EDR, and the BSAI
Amendment 80 fisheries EDR. This action would also eliminate the EDR
requirements for the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) trawl fisheries. This
proposed rule is intended to promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act), the Crab FMP, the Fishery Management Plans for Groundfish
of the Gulf of Alaska Management Area (GOA FMP), the Groundfish of the
BSAI Management Area (BSAI FMP), and other applicable laws.
DATES: Submit comments on or before December 1, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by Docket ID NOAA-NMFS-
2022-0083 by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter NOAA-NMFS-2022-0083 in the Search box.
Click on the ``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Assistant Regional
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region NMFS. Mail
comments to P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802-1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address), confidential business information,
or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily by the sender
will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous comments (enter
``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain anonymous).
Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact Review (referred to as
the ``Analysis'') and the Categorical Exclusion prepared for this
emergency rule may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov
identified by Docket ID NOAA-NMFS-2022-0083 or from the NMFS Alaska
Region website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/alaska.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects
[[Page 65725]]
of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this rule
may be submitted by mail to NMFS at the above address and to
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find the particular information
collection by selecting ``Currently under 30-day Review--Open for
Public'' or by using the search function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Watson, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS manages the groundfish fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off Alaska under the BSAI FMP and the GOA
FMP. NMFS manages the king and Tanner crab fisheries in the United
States EEZ of the BSAI under the Crab FMP. The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) prepared, and NMFS approved, the BSAI FMP,
the GOA FMP, and the Crab FMP under the authority of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
A notice of availability for Amendment 52 to the Crab FMP was
published in the Federal Register at (87 FR 60638), on October 6, 2022.
Comment on Amendment 52 is invited through December 5, 2022. All
relevant written comments received by the end of the comment period,
whether specifically directed to the FMP amendment, this proposed rule,
or both, will be considered in the approval/disapproval decision for
Amendment 52 and addressed in the response to comments in the final
rule.
Background
Four EDR data collection programs are in place for crab and
groundfish fisheries off Alaska. These programs impose mandatory annual
data reporting requirements for regulated entities participating in the
BSAI Crab Rationalization (CR) fisheries, the AFA pollock fishery, the
BSAI Amendment 80 fisheries, and the GOA trawl fisheries. The purpose
of EDRs are to gather data and information to improve the analyses
developed by the Council on the social and economic effects of the
catch share or rationalization programs, to understand the economic
performance of participants in these programs, and to help estimate
impacts of future issues, problems, or proposed revisions to the
programs covered by the EDRs.
CR Program EDR
The Crab EDR was implemented concurrently with the CR Program under
Amendments 18 and 19 of the BSAI Crab FMP (70 FR 10174; March 2, 2005).
The rule requiring the Crab EDR submission was codified in 50 CFR
680.6, which retroactively required participants to submit EDR forms
for 1998, 2001, and 2004 calendar year operations by June 1, 2005, and
to submit an annual Crab EDR form for calendar year 2005, and
thereafter by May 1 of the following year. Amendment 42 (78 FR 36122;
June 17, 2013) revised annual Crab EDR reporting requirements in order
to eliminate redundant reporting requirements, standardize reporting
across participants, and reduce costs associated with data collection.
The amended rule extended the annual submission deadline to July 31.
The reporting requirements for the Crab EDR apply to owners and
leaseholders of catcher vessels (CVs) and catcher/processors (CPs) with
landings of BSAI CR crab, including Community Development Quota (CDQ)
allocated crab, and owners and leaseholders of Registered Crab
Receivers (RCRs) who purchase and/or process landed BSAI CR crab during
a calendar year. For all groups, the annual submission requirement is
imposed on CR crab program participants who harvest, purchase, or
process CR crab.
The Crab EDR consists of reporting forms developed for three
respective sectors: the Crab CV EDR, Crab processor EDR, and the Crab
CP EDR. The CV and processor forms collect distinct sets of data
elements, with the CP form combining of all data elements collected in
the CV form and applicable elements from the processor form. A complete
list of the data elements for each of the forms is in Section 3.2 of
the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Amendment 80 EDR
The Amendment 80 EDR was implemented on January 20, 2008 (72 FR
52668; September 14, 2007) as part of the Amendment 80 management
program and codified in regulation at 50 CFR 679.94. Amendment 80
allocated several BSAI non-pollock trawl groundfish species among trawl
fishery sectors, and facilitated the formation of harvesting
cooperatives in the non-AFA trawl CP sector. The initial Amendment 80
EDR submissions were due June 1, 2009, reporting data for the 2008
calendar year. The Amendment 80 EDR reporting requirements applied to
all Amendment 80 Quota Share (QS) permit holders. Permit holders who
actively operated an Amendment 80 vessel were required to complete the
entire EDR form, while QS permit holders who did not operate a vessel
were required to complete portions of the form pertaining to QS permit
sale or lease costs and revenues.
When the GOA Trawl EDR program was implemented for both CV and CP
participants, it amended the Amendment 80 EDR at 50 CFR 679.94 to
include the CPs participating in GOA trawl fisheries. It also changed
the name of the form from the Amendment 80 EDR to the Annual Trawl CP
EDR. Additional reporting elements specific to GOA Trawl CPs were added
to the form. The rule also extended the requirement to complete all
portions of the EDR form to owners and leaseholders of any vessel named
on a License Limitation Program (LLP) groundfish license authorizing a
CP using trawl gear to harvest and process LLP groundfish species in
the GOA. The association between the GOA Trawl (CV and shoreside
processor) EDR and Annual Trawl CP EDRs has resulted in confusion. For
the sake of clarity, in this proposed rule, the EDR currently specified
under 50 CFR 679.94 is referenced as the Amendment 80 EDR (rather than
the Annual Trawl CP EDR), and the EDR under 50 CFR 679.110 (a)(1) and
(2) is referenced as the GOA Trawl EDR; any relevant distinctions or
overlaps are described as needed.
The Amendment 80 EDR form has been submitted annually by Amendment
80 QS holders since 2008. A complete list of the data elements for each
of the forms is in Section 3.2 of the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
GOA Trawl EDR
The GOA Trawl EDR was implemented on January 1, 2015 (79 FR 71313;
December 2, 2014) and codified in regulation at 50 CFR 679.110. The
initial GOA Trawl EDR submissions were due June 1, 2016, for reporting
2015 calendar year data. The GOA Trawl EDR was implemented to collect
relevant baseline information that could be used to assess the impacts
of a future catch share program on affected harvesters, processors, and
communities in the GOA. However, Council action on a catch share
program that addressed issues with GOA bycatch management was suspended
in December 2016, and no catch share program exists for GOA harvesters,
processors, and communities.
The intended submitters for the GOA Trawl EDR includes owners and
leaseholders of CVs and CPs active in the Central and Western GOA
groundfish trawl fishery and operators of shoreside processing
facilities that receive groundfish catch from the GOA. The EDR consists
of two distinct EDR forms, the GOA Trawl CV EDR and GOA Shoreside
Processor EDR. An additional EDR form overlaps with the
[[Page 65726]]
Amendment 80 EDR, as described above.
The GOA Trawl CV EDR form is required for all trawl CVs that
harvested groundfish in the GOA during the previous year. The GOA
Shoreside Processor EDR form is required for all shore-based processors
that receive and process groundfish from GOA trawl fisheries. The
Annual Trawl CP EDR form is required for all vessel owners and
leaseholders that catch and process groundfish in the GOA trawl
fisheries. A complete list of the data elements for each of the forms
is in Section 3.2 of the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Amendment 91 Chinook Salmon EDR
The Amendment 91 EDR and additional record keeping and reporting
requirements associated with monitoring of Chinook salmon bycatch
avoidance measures for the AFA pollock fishery were implemented
concurrently on March 5, 2012 (77 FR 5389; February 3, 2012). The
implementation of the Amendment 91 EDR occurred approximately 17 months
after Amendment 91 (75 FR 53026) went into effect. The initial
submission of EDR forms required under 50 CFR 679.65 were due on June
1, 2013 reporting data for the 2012 calendar year. The Amendment 91 EDR
was implemented to provide additional data to assess the effectiveness
of the Chinook salmon bycatch management measures in the Bering Sea
(BS) pollock fishery.
The Amendment 91 EDR reporting requirement applies to owners and
leaseholders of AFA CVs, CPs, and motherships active in the BS pollock
fishery and to entities eligible to receive Chinook salmon Prohibited
Species Catch (PSC) allocation, including AFA in-shore sector harvest
cooperative representatives, sector-based Incentive Plan Agreement
representatives, and CDQ group representatives. In addition, vessel
captains who actively participate in the AFA pollock fishery are
intended to complete one of the three Amendment 91 EDR forms, but this
form is submitted by the owner or leaseholders of the vessel.
The Amendment 91 EDR program consists of three separate forms: the
Compensated Transfer Report (CTR), the Vessel Fuel Survey, and the
Vessel Master Survey. The CTR collects transaction data on all
compensated transfers of Chinook PSC by participants in the AFA
fishery. The CTR is to be completed by all entities participating as
lessor or lessee in compensated transfers of Chinook PSC. However, no
such transactions have ever been reported. The Vessel Fuel Survey form
is required for all AFA vessels that harvested BSAI pollock during the
previous year and collects information about the vessel's average fuel
consumption, the total amount in gallons of fuel loaded onto the
vessel, and total annual fuel cost. The Vessel Master Survey form is
used to determine the fishing and bycatch conditions observed during
the BSAI pollock fishery and factors that motivated Chinook salmon
bycatch avoidance. A complete list of the data elements for each of the
forms is in Section 3.2 of the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
History of the Action
Public testimony from one stakeholder at the February 2018 Council
meeting noted that the EDR programs had been in effect for some time
and that industry was spending considerable time and money to complete
the reports, in some cases reimbursing NMFS for the administrative
costs of the EDR programs through catch share cost recovery programs.
The testifier suggested that the Council review the EDR requirements to
determine whether and how the data was being used, whether it was being
collected efficiently, and whether the data collection programs were
meeting the Council's needs.
In April 2018, the Council reviewed a discussion paper prepared by
NMFS that provided information related to NMFS's request that the
Council review all its regulations to identify any that were outdated,
unnecessary, ineffective, or could be further streamlined. This
discussion paper referenced the Council's February 2018 discussion
regarding the EDR requirements being a possible area warranting future
Council review. In addition, at the April 2018 meeting, the Council
also heard public testimony raising the question of whether the EDR
requirements for the GOA trawl CVs and shoreside processors had met the
Council's purpose and need to collect baseline information to assess
the impacts of a potential future catch share program in those
fisheries.
Later in the April 2018 meeting, in response to this public comment
and further discussion among Council members, the Council requested
that NMFS prepare a discussion paper describing the EDR requirements
for all programs, explaining how the data are used, and estimating the
costs of complying with the EDR requirements. The Council's motion
stated that the Council could then use the information in the
discussion paper to determine if revisions to EDR requirements were
needed and, if so, the priority and process for proposed revisions.
NMFS presented this discussion paper to the Council in April 2019.
The EDR discussion paper included a set of shorter-term practical
recommendations aimed at reducing costs and burdens, as well as
improving data utility by streamlining data access. These
recommendations included eliminating routine third-party data
verification audits and limiting the audits to instances of gross
noncompliance, reviewing duplication of reporting requirements in EDR
programs, and improving data utility while maintaining confidential
data protections by reconsidering the blind formatting and the rule-of-
5 aggregation standard. Blind formatting and the rule-of-5 aggregation
standard are explained in detail further down in this proposed rule. In
addition to the shorter-term practical recommendations, the discussion
paper also set forth longer term recommendations that included
developing a systematic approach to identifying and prioritizing the
Council's needs for economic and social science information. Therein,
these recommendations specifically noted the need to identify relevant
analytical and performance metrics, minimum requirements for accuracy
and precision of information outputs, and a framework for balancing
trade-offs between all relevant dimensions of information quality and
system costs. A full description of the specific longer-term
recommendations of the April 2019 NMFS discussion paper can be found in
Section 1.3 the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Also at the April 2019 meeting, the Council recommended a
comprehensive review of the current EDR programs. The comprehensive
review was undertaken by the Council's Social Sciences Planning Team
(SSPT). The SSPT provided a report to the Council about its progress on
this issue at the February 2020 meeting. Following review of the SSPT
report, the Council further instructed the SSPT to engage in a series
of outreach meetings to seek input from EDR stakeholders in evaluating
the EDR program overall, as well as each individual EDR program.
Virtual outreach meetings were held in 2020, and the final SSPT
outreach reports were presented to the Council in April 2021.
After receiving the SSPT reports, the Council took action in a
motion on April 16, 2021. That motion did not change the purpose and
need, but created a new alternative, with four non-mutually exclusive
options to remove each EDR. The motion also
[[Page 65727]]
added a new option to change the frequency of EDR information
collections from annually to options of two years, three years, and
five years, respectively.
The Council took final action on February 8, 2022. The Council
chose to eliminate the use of data verification audits, because
automated procedures for validating EDR submission have reduced the
need for audits. Eliminating data verification audits would remove a
potential compliance burden for those required to submit EDRs. The
Council also chose to revise the data aggregation and blind formatting
requirements in the Crab EDR in order to improve the usability of
collected data and to make the Crab EDR's confidentiality policy
consistent with other Council and NMFS data reporting methods. The
Council chose to remove the GOA Trawl EDR requirements altogether. The
original purpose of this EDR was to collect baseline data to prepare
for development of a GOA trawl catch share program and the Council has
subsequently chosen not to continue with development of a catch share
program for the GOA trawl fishery at this time. Accordingly, this EDR
is no longer aligned with its intended purpose. Eliminating the GOA
Trawl EDR would remove the reporting burden for industry and agency
management costs. Finally, the Council reiterated its April 2021
request for several non-regulatory changes to the EDR reporting forms
to decrease respondent burden. These changes were identified in
stakeholder workshops and the March 2021 SSPT report, and include
changes to the EDR forms to eliminate data fields that are not used in
analyses and to pre-fill data fields that do not change frequently. To
that end, NMFS economists are implementing these changes and will
report progress to the Council in October 2022.
Need for Action
Data submitted in the current Crab EDRs provide valuable
information for program evaluation and analysis of proposed
conservation and management measures. However, the Crab EDR was
implemented over ten years ago and revisions are needed to improve the
usability, efficiency, and consistency of this data collection program
and to minimize cost to industry and the Federal government. Several of
the revisions to the Crab EDR included in this proposed rule,
specifically on the use of third-party audits and blind formatting,
could reduce industry and government costs while still maintaining the
integrity and confidentiality of this data collection program.
In the original Crab EDR program, several requirements were
implemented to provide a higher standard of confidentiality for
proprietary business information reported in the Crab EDR. These
requirements were stricter than those that apply to all other
confidential fisheries information. In practice, these stricter
confidentiality requirements have reduced the usability of the data for
analysis and increased the cost of the Crab EDR program, without
providing additional practical protections for sensitive information.
Confidentiality requirements that apply to other routine data
collections provide sufficient protections for the EDR data.
Different issues exist in the GOA Trawl EDR program, which was
implemented in 2015 and designed to collect baseline information to
assess the impacts of a future GOA trawl catch share program. Because
no catch share program is in development by the Council and none is apt
to be developed in the foreseeable future, the GOA Trawl EDR program is
no longer needed.
Challenges With Data Verification and Auditing Requirement
EDR data verification is required under EDR regulations and
requires NMFS or its designated agent, known as a data collection agent
(DCA), to verify information with a person required to submit the
applicable EDR or that person's designated representative. The
regulations require the EDR submitter to respond to inquiries from the
DCA within 20 days, require the submitter to provide supporting records
to the DCA as requested, and authorize the DCA auditor to review the
records for the purpose of substantiating values reported in the EDR.
In developing the data verification and audit procedures, NMFS has
relied on the Council's record of decision for the CR Program for
guidance in implementing the Crab EDR, specifically, the CR Program
Regulatory Impact Review/Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/
IRFA). This guidance states that the verification of data, auditing,
and error-checking would be the primary responsibility of the DCA.
Further, the guidance provides that the DCA will: (1) develop a system
to identify outliers, incomplete data, or anomalies in the data
submissions; and (2) retain accountants to review data submissions as
part of the audit process and identify errors or flag possible
fraudulent submissions.
NMFS began developing data verification protocols and procedures
for the Crab EDR in 2005 and has continued to refine the process to
identify and correct data reporting errors, while reducing the cost and
burden of the audit process. Prior to incorporation of EDR data into
the Alaska Fish Information Network (AKFIN) database in 2011, EDR data
validation was largely reliant on the audit process. Automation now
allows the DCA to identify most errors and obtain corrections from
submitters shortly after EDRs are submitted
EDR data verification via automation currently employs a series of
procedures, including (1) primary, automated data validation
procedures, (2) secondary validation employing statistical procedures
and visual inspection to identify data anomalies and statistical
outliers, and (3) editing and imputation for data errors identified by
data users that were not detected and corrected in primary and
secondary validation.
Primary automated validation procedures are executed on each EDR
record shortly after receiving a certified EDR submission, with follow-
up contacts with submitters to obtain corrections as needed. Most of
these errors are identified and corrected easily with a phone call and
result in a re-certified EDR submission within two weeks of the
submission.
To begin secondary validation via automation, AKFIN completes
integration of current year EDR records with other datasets,
calculation of pro-rata and statistical indices, and plotting for
visual inspection. NMFS and the DCA review the results to identify
visual outliers and anomalies. Flagged values are selected for
correction through follow-up by the DCA or selection for a third-party
verification audit.
By contrast, audit protocols require auditors to notify EDR
submitters that have been selected for audit and to request supporting
materials to enable auditors to substantiate reported values. Once
auditors have received the requested records, the auditors confirm a
correct value for the data element (either the original reported value
or a corrected value). Auditors also evaluate the quality of supporting
information provided by the submitter and characterize the quality and
nature of reporting errors. Audit corrections are entered into the EDR
database, and AKFIN's production version of the EDR database is
finalized after all audit results are entered.
But two issues have emerged with the audit process from working
with CPA firms. First, in all the EDR audit reviews conducted since
2006, there has not been a single finding of intentional
[[Page 65728]]
misreporting or of any bias in the direction of reporting errors
identified by auditors. Most of the errors found between 2006 and the
present were unintentional human error and could be easily corrected by
contacting the submitter for clarification without the additional cost
of hiring a CPA firm. Second, verifying the quality of results produced
by CPAs has required NMFS and the DCA to recreate the same work
completed by the CPA firms. The tasks involved with auditing EDR data
submissions are unique, generally unfamiliar to CPAs, and require one
or two annual cycles of EDR submissions to gain experience. Given that
CPA firms have chosen to not renew their contracts with NMFS and new
contracts must be established, it has proven challenging for CPAs to
gain experience auditing EDR data submissions. Without experienced CPAs
to complete the audits, NMFS and the DCA must continue to spend
significant time and resources verifying the audits. Eliminating the
audit authorization would remove these challenges.
Removing the audit requirements would also avoid the DCA from
needing to contract a third-party auditor to conduct the audit portion
of the data verification. And doing so would not compromise data
quality due to the automated EDR data verification procedures described
above, which would remain in place and continue to be used under the
proposed rule. Additionally, enforcement provisions exist for all
recordkeeping and reporting requirements, including the EDR program.
Enforcement actions would continue to be possible in cases of
noncompliance with the EDR regulatory provisions.
The automated verification and audit processes accrue an annual
combined cost for industry that is estimated to be approximately
$26,400 for each Crab EDR; $1,480 for each Amendment 80 EDR; and $2,405
for each GOA Trawl EDR. While the removal of the audit processes would
reduce these costs, some portion would remain as routine automated data
verification procedures would continue as detailed above.
In addition to reducing the cost of industry compliance with
audits, the NMFS contracting cost for CPA firms would be eliminated.
The Crab EDR costs have ranged from approximately $22,000 to $65,000
annually and have generally been decreasing over the life of the Crab
EDR Program. Audits were done in the Amendment 91 program in 2013 and
2014 with costs of between $15,000 and $18,000 annually for audits of
the fuel and master surveys. Amendment 80 EDR and GOA Trawl EDR
combined have had auditing costs of $30,000 to $35,000 annually. This
action would eliminate the audit contracting costs incurred for the EDR
program, as well as any associated cost recovery fees.
Challenges With the Blind Formatting Requirement
Blind formatting requires the collection of EDR forms to be
performed by a third-party designated data collection auditor (DDCA)
and the removal of unique identifiers (e.g., vessel identifiers, permit
numbers) from EDR data records accessible to the Council and NMFS.
Blind formatting is only required for the Crab EDR and the GOA Trawl
EDR. Blind formatting introduces significant administrative challenges
for NMFS's management of the EDR program because staff responsible for
oversight of data verification and validation processes are prohibited
from accessing identifying information. This has impeded timely
completion of verification audits and production of economic reports
developed from EDR data.
The EDR data confidentiality protocols also impose limitations on
the data's usability because the data is aggregated to such an extent
that details needed to analyze the associated catch share program's
social and economic impacts are not available. The DDCA and blind
formatting are unique to the Crab EDR and the GOA Trawl EDR program, as
they are not required for the Amendment 80 EDR program or Amendment 91
Chinook Salmon EDR program. The Council wished to apply a higher
standard of confidential data protection to the cost data and other
proprietary business information collected in EDRs. But these
protective standards impede the Council and NMFS analysts' use of the
data. Blind data is frequently either inconsistently applied across EDR
programs or unusable because critical data elements, such as permit
numbers, are not accessible. Analysts' use of blind EDR data also
enhances the risk of inadvertently disclosing confidential data. This
is because of the small number of entities that may be represented in
the EDR records. If the EDR records are not accessible to analysts, it
is hard for them to know if the data should be confidential. Analysts
may avoid using EDR data even where it may have been the best
information available, and choose alternative data sets with lower risk
and complexity.
Removing the blind formatting requirements would make the data
aggregations and confidentiality protections for the Crab EDR
comparable to the requirements under other EDR programs. It would also
increase the usability and access to the EDR data for Council and NMFS
analysts. Without the concern of inadvertently disclosing confidential
data, analysts may be more likely to use the EDR data.
Challenges With the GOA Trawl EDR Program
In its original purpose and need statement for the GOA Trawl EDR in
its February 2013 motion, the Council identified a need to establish a
baseline information collection that could be used to assess the
impacts of a catch share program, particularly on affected harvesters,
processors, and communities in the GOA. However, Council action on a
catch share program that addressed issues with GOA bycatch management
was suspended in December 2016. Thus, the original need for the GOA
Trawl EDR has been indefinitely suspended, calling into question the
efficacy of continuing the program given that taxpayers and industry
bear the cost of maintaining the program. Elimination of the GOA Trawl
EDR would avoid the agency-borne programmatic costs since the GOA Trawl
EDR is not part of a catch share fishery and, thus, administrative
costs are not subject to cost recovery. Elimination of the GOA Trawl
EDR program would also eliminate compliance costs for industry.
Additional information about the administrative and the industry
compliance costs associated with this EDR can be found in Section 4.5
of the Analysis (see ADDRESSES).
Proposed Rule
This proposed rule would remove or revise regulations at 50 CFR
parts 679 and 680. This proposed rule would remove third-party data
verification audits for the Crab EDR, the Amendment 91 EDR, and the
Amendment 80 EDR and remove blind formatting requirements for the Crab
EDR. This action would also eliminate the GOA Trawl EDR requirements.
Eliminating Data Verification Audits
This proposed rule would remove the data verification audit
requirements at Sec. 679.65(e), Sec. 679.94(b), and Sec. 680.6(f),
respectively. Removal of the audit authorization would eliminate the
need for the DCA to contract with a third-party auditor to conduct the
audit portion of the data verification. EDR data verification currently
employs a series of validation procedures, as described above. These
data validation procedures would remain and continue
[[Page 65729]]
to ensure the data reported is error-free. Enforcement actions would
continue to be possible in cases of noncompliance with the EDR
provisions as part of normal enforcement of record keeping and
reporting requirements.
This proposed rule would also remove the definitions for
``Designated data collection auditor'' at Sec. 679.2 and ``Auditor''
at Sec. 680.2. Because the EDR audit requirements would be removed
under this proposed rule, these definitions will no longer be required.
Eliminating Blind Formatting
This proposed rule would remove the definitions for ``Blind data''
at Sec. 679.2 and Sec. 680.2. Both definitions describe the required
formatting process to remove the personal identifiers to the data
collected from the EDRs. The identifiers include Federal fisheries
permit numbers and State of Alaska vessel registration numbers that are
essential data elements to analysts when developing reports and
documents based on EDR data. Removing the blind formatting requirements
would make the data aggregations and confidentiality protections for
the Crab EDR comparable to the requirements under the other EDR
programs. It would also increase the usability and access to the EDR
data for Council and NMFS analysts.
Eliminating the GOA Trawl EDR
This proposed rule would remove and reserve Subpart J--Gulf of
Alaska Trawl Economic Data. The original purpose of the GOA Trawl EDR
was to establish a baseline information collection that could be used
to assess the impacts of a catch share program. However, no catch share
program has been developed to date or is currently contemplated. The
original need for this data collection program has been indefinitely
diminished since 2016 when the Council suspended work on a possible GOA
catch share program, calling into question the efficacy of continuing
the program. Eliminating the GOA Trawl EDR would avoid the agency-borne
programmatic costs incurred by the Federal government due to the GOA
Trawl EDR not being part of a catch share fishery and, thus,
administrative costs not being subject to cost recovery. Elimination of
the GOA Trawl EDR program would also eliminate compliance costs for
industry.
This proposed rule would also revise section heading at Sec.
679.94 and revise Sec. 679.94(a)(1) to remove GOA Trawl CPs from the
requirement to submit the Amendment 80 EDR form. When the GOA Trawl EDR
program was implemented, it required owners and leaseholders of any
vessel named on an LLP groundfish license authorizing a CP using trawl
gear to harvest and process LLP groundfish species in the GOA to
complete all portions of the Amendment 80 EDR form. This proposed rule
would limit the Amendment 80 EDR requirement to Amendment 80 QS permit
holders alone.
Other Regulatory Changes
NMFS proposes to revise regulations at Sec. Sec. 680.6(a)(2),
(a)(3), (c), (d), (e)(1), and (e)(2) to update the instructions for
submitting Crab EDR forms to be consistent with the submission
instructions for the other more recent EDR programs.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b) and 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
the NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule
is consistent with the FMPs, other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and other applicable law, subject to further consideration of
comments received during the public comment period.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Certification Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration that this proposed rule, if adopted, would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This proposed rule would remove third party data verification
audits and blind formatting requirements for the BSAI crab fisheries
EDR, AFA pollock fishery Chinook Salmon EDR, and the BSAI Amendment 80
fisheries EDR. This action would also eliminate altogether the EDR
requirements for the GOA trawl fisheries. This proposed rule would
improve the usability, efficiency, and consistency of the data
collection programs and minimize cost to industry and the Federal
government while still maintaining the integrity and confidentiality of
the EDR data.
Many of the directly regulated entities potentially affected by
this action are considered to be large entities based on cooperative
affiliations. These include the AFA CPs, AFA CVs, Amendment 80 CPs, and
the Crab CVs. However, there are three AFA motherships that are not
likely to exceed the 750 person threshold individually or within the
fishing cooperative that they belong to and are considered to be
directly regulated small entities. There is also one Amendment 80-
eligible CP that is subject to the Amendment 80 EDR that is a small
entity with no known cooperative affiliations. Shoreside processors
participating in the Crab EDR and GOA Trawl EDR are considered to be
directly regulated small entities. The numbers of directly regulated
small entities in the shoreside component of the GOA Trawl EDR varies
considerably and has been as high as 17 in recent years. Nineteen
shoreside crab processors are considered to be directly regulated small
entities. The six CDQ organizations are directly regulated small
entities within one or more of the EDRs. Finally, 26 of the 78 trawl
CVs that submit the GOA trawl EDR are directly regulated small
entities. Based on the scope of this action, impacts to small, directly
regulated entities are expected to be beneficial because this action
would reduce and remove the cost of the EDR requirement to the directly
regulated entities.
This action does not place any new regulatory burden on fishery
participants required to submit EDRs; it removes reporting burdens to
improve the usability, efficiency, and consistency of the data
collection programs and minimize cost to participants required to
submit EDRs. This proposed action, therefore, is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of the small
entities directly regulated by this proposed action.
As a result, an initial regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required, and none has been prepared.
Regulatory Impact Review
A Regulatory Impact Review was prepared to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory alternatives. A copy of this analysis
is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). The Council recommended
Amendment 52 and the regulatory revisions in this proposed rule based
on those measures that maximized net benefits to the Nation. Specific
aspects of the economic analysis are discussed above in the
Certification under the Regulatory Flexibility Act section.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This proposed rule contains collection of information requirements
subject to review and approval by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act. NMFS has submitted these
requirements to OMB for approval under OMB control numbers 0648-0518
(Alaska Region Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Crab EDRs); 0648-0564
(Groundfish Trawl Catcher/Processor
[[Page 65730]]
EDR); 0648-0633 (Alaska Chinook Salmon EDR); and 0648-0700 (Gulf of
Alaska Catcher Vessel and Processor Trawl EDR). The proposed changes to
the collections are described below. The public reporting burden for
the information collection requirements provided below includes the
time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources,
gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection of information.
OMB Control Number 0648-0518
NMFS proposes to revise and extend by three years OMB Control
Number 0648-0518. This collection covers the economic data collection
requirements for the CR Program and is necessary to monitor and
evaluate the CR Program.
This collection would be revised to remove third-party data
verification audits and blind formatting requirements for the BSAI crab
fisheries EDR because this proposed rule removes these requirements.
The three crab EDR forms would be revised to pre-fill data fields that
do not change frequently to reduce the burden of the crab EDR forms.
Pre-filling the data fields is estimated to reduce the respondent's
data entry time by 15 minutes. However, since the burden hour estimates
for the forms are rounded to the nearest hour, this modest reduction
would not decrease the public reporting burden. Subject to public
comment, no changes are made to the estimated reporting or cost burden
for the EDRs because the estimates allow for differences in the time
needed to complete and submit the forms.
Public reporting burden per individual response is estimated to
average 20 hours each for the Annual Catcher Vessel Crab EDR and the
Annual CP Crab EDR, 16 hours for the Annual Processor Crab EDR, and 1
hour for an EDR certification page.
The estimated number of respondents for this collection is 77; the
estimated total annual burden hours are 1,449 hours; and the estimated
total annual cost to the public for recordkeeping and reporting costs
is $385.
OMB Control Number 0648-0564
NMFS proposes to revise and extend by three years OMB Control
Number 0648-0564. This collection covers the economic data collection
requirements for Amendment 80 and GOA trawl CPs. This collection is
necessary to help evaluate the Amendment 80 Program, including program-
eligible trawl CPs, and is used by NMFS and the Council to assess the
impacts of major changes in the groundfish management regime, including
programs for prohibited species catch species and target species.
This collection would be revised to remove third-party data
verification audits for the Annual Trawl Catcher/Processor EDR and
remove requirements for the GOA Trawl EDR Program because this proposed
rule removes regulations for the audit authorization and eliminates the
GOA Trawl EDR Program. Eliminating the program would simplify the
Annual Trawl Catcher/Processor form. This form would be revised to
remove data fields that are not being used in analyses and to pre-fill
data fields that do not change frequently. These changes to the form
are expected to reduce the time burden on respondents by approximately
two hours.
Public reporting burden per individual response is estimated to
average 20 hours for the Annual GOA Trawl Catcher/Processor EDR.
The estimated number of respondents for this collection is 22; the
estimated total annual burden hours are 440 hours; and the estimated
total annual cost to the public for recordkeeping and reporting costs
is $110.
OMB Control Number 0648-0633
NMFS proposes that OMB Control Number 0648-0633 is revised to
remove the verification audit for the Compensated Transfer Report
because this rule removes the authorization for third party data
verification audits. Subject to public comment, no changes are made to
the estimated reporting or cost burden for the EDR forms as the
estimates allow for differences in the time needed to complete and
submit the forms.
Public reporting burden per individual response is estimated to
average 40 hours for the Compensated Transfer Report, 4 hours for the
Vessel Fuel Survey, and 4 hours for the Vessel Master Survey.
OMB Control Number 0648-0700
NMFS proposes to discontinue OMB Control Number 0648-0700, which
covers the economic data collection requirements for the GOA Trawl EDR
Program. The original purpose of the GOA Trawl EDR was to establish a
baseline information collection that could be used to assess the
impacts of a catch share program. However, no catch share program has
been developed to date. The original need for this data collection
program has been indefinitely suspended, calling into question the
efficacy of continuing the program given that taxpayers and industry
bear the cost of maintaining the program. Elimination of the GOA Trawl
EDR would eliminate the agency borne programmatic costs incurred by the
Federal government as the GOA Trawl EDR is not part of a catch share
fishery and thus administrative costs are not subject to cost recovery.
Elimination of the GOA Trawl EDR program would also eliminate
compliance costs for industry.
Public Comment
Public comment is sought regarding whether this proposed
collection-of-information is necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of the agency, including whether the information shall
have practical utility; the accuracy of the burden estimate; ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected; and ways to minimize the burden of the collection-of-
information, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology. Submit comments on
these or any other aspects of the collection-of-information to NMFS
Alaska Region at the ADDRESSES above and at www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, no person is required
to respond to, and no person shall be subject to penalty for failure to
comply with, a collection-of-information subject to the requirements of
the PRA, unless that collection-of-information displays a currently
valid OMB control number. All currently approved NOAA collections of
information may be viewed at https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRASearch.
List of Subjects
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 680
Alaska, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 20, 2022.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50
CFR parts 679 and 680 as follows:
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 679 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et seq.; 3631 et seq.;
Pub. L. 108-447; Pub. L. 111-281.
[[Page 65731]]
Sec. 679.2 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 679.2, remove the definitions for ``Blind data'' and
``Designated data collection auditor''.
Sec. 679.65 [Amended]
0
3. In Sec. 679.65, remove paragraph (e).
0
4. In Sec. 679.94, revise the section heading, paragraph (a)(1), and
remove and reserve paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.94 Economic data report (EDR) for the Amendment 80 sector.
(a) * * *
(1) Requirement to submit an EDR. A person who held an Amendment 80
QS permit during a calendar year must submit a complete Annual Trawl
Catcher/Processor EDR for that calendar year by following the
instructions on the Annual Trawl Catcher/Processor EDR form.
(b) [Reserved]
Subpart J--[Removed and Reserved]
0
5. Remove and reserve subpart J, consisting of Sec. 679.110.
* * * * *
PART 680--SHELLFISH FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
0
6. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 680 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1862; Pub. L. 109-241; Pub. L. 109-479.
Sec. 680.2 [Amended]
0
7. In Sec. 680.2, remove the definitions for ``Auditor'' and ``Blind
data''.
0
8. In Sec. 680.6, revise paragraphs (a)(2) and (3), (c), (d), (e)(1)
and (2), and remove paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 680.6 Crab economic data report (EDR).
(a) * * *
(2) A completed EDR or EDR certification pages must be submitted to
NMFS, in the manner specified on the NMFS-issued EDR form, for each
calendar year on or before 1700 hours, A.l.t., July 31 of the following
year.
(3) Annual EDR forms for catcher vessels, catcher/processors,
shoreside crab processors, and stationary floating crab processors are
available on the NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov or by contacting NMFS at 1-800-304-4846.
* * * * *
(c) Annual catcher vessel crab EDR--Any owner or leaseholder of a
catcher vessel that landed CR crab in the previous calendar year must
submit to NMFS, in the manner specified on the NMFS-issued EDR form, a
completed catcher vessel EDR for annual data for the previous calendar
year.
(d) Annual catcher/processor crab EDR--Any owner or leaseholder of
a catcher/processor that harvested or processed CR crab in the previous
calendar year must submit to NMFS, in the manner specified on the NMFS-
issued EDR form, a completed catcher/processor EDR for annual data for
the previous calendar year.
(e) * * *
(1) Any owner or leaseholder of an SFCP or a shoreside crab
processor that processed CR crab, including custom processing of CR
crab performed for other crab buyers, in the previous calendar year
must submit to NMFS, in the manner specified on the NMFS-issued EDR
form, a completed processor EDR for annual data for the previous
calendar year.
(2) Any holder of a registered crab receiver (RCR) permit that
obtained custom processing for CR Program crab in the previous calendar
year must submit to NMFS, in the manner specified on the NMFS-issued
EDR form, a completed processor EDR for annual data for the previous
calendar year.
[FR Doc. 2022-23306 Filed 10-31-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P